Wikipedia:Peer review/Jesu, meine Freude, BWV 227/archive1
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This peer review discussion is closed. |
I've listed this article for peer review because it's a piece dear to me and I'd like to see it growing to FA quality. Francis Schonken brought it to GA quality, and we welcome suggestions to improve it further.
Thanks, Gerda Arendt (talk) 22:06, 15 April 2021 (UTC)
Comments from Francis Schonken
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Comments from Amitchell125
[edit]- Lead section / infobox
- Who was Johann Franck? Who is Christoph Wolff?
- I'll explain that in the body, but for the lead it's too much, especially for Wolff who wasn't among the creators. The lead - as usual - will be the last to look at, for me. --GA
- I beg to differ, most readers only look at the lead (MOS:LEAD: "The lead is the first thing most people will read upon arriving at an article, and may be the only portion of the article that they read.") If Franck and Wolff are important enough to include in the lead, it should be clear to readers who they are. AM
- E minor - I would amend this to ‘ in the key in E minor’.
- never did that, not in any FA about compositions, - for those who don't know already what major-minor means in music, the fact of E will not add. --GA
- Understood. AM
- only paraphrases the tune – why only?
- because all other stanzas have it fully, albeit two different versions, - paraphrase is a euphemism, because until RandomCanadian made the graphic, I had not noticed any relation, - decades into knowing the piece that is --GA
- Understood, but readers may not know what you have explained to me (I didn't), so it might be worth amending the text. AM
- Link paraphrase; theological.
- I thought these are common words. No? --Gerda Arendt (talk) 08:40, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
- You can't assume they are; I would link them. AM
- 1 History
- Link Johann Sebastian (include surname); motets.
- yes --GA
- Amend Several of these motets to ‘Several’.
- you did that, thanks --GA
- Put a comma after tenor and bass.
- yes --Gerda Arendt (talk) 08:46, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
- and/or based – and/or doesn’t really work here.
- fixed, I hope --GA
- I am confused by what is being referred to in In the latter case.
- fixed, I hope --GA
- Link or explain SSATB.
- done --GA
- only very few works for a five-part choir; most of his other motets are for double SATB choir – doesn’t this say the same thing twice?
- the sentence goes on, no? --GA
- to be performed with – ‘for’?
- don't think so, rather "by" if "with" doesn't work - "for" the audience, I'd say --Gerda Arendt (talk) 19:21, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
- 1.1 Epistle text and chorale
- The image is 1.1, and should be reduced to 1.
- I rather used a smaller image of the same, - a smaller size would render details too small. --GA
- Who were Johann Franck and Catherine Winkworth?
- a) I'd prefer not to enlarge on Franck in a sentence pointing at the two sources for the text.
- b) I placed the whole Winkworth later, - she was a translator, - how would you say "the translator CW translated"? please check what I tried --GA
- I’m unclear what framing the poetry means.
- How would you say in English what was just described before: that the very first line is identical with the very last line? --GA
- published for the first time – ‘first published’?
- I believe you, and it's what I see --GA
- , after which could be replaced by a colon.
- done --GA
- Whilst not losing the link, I would replace bar form with ‘the form AAB’, to help readers understand the text more easily.
- I added it in brackets, because after we just had SSATB, it might come as too much of a surprise not to land on "alto alto bass". --GA
- Link Leipzig where it occurs the first time.
- Almost a decade ago, I suggested to have an article Leipzig at Bach's time, because the link to the present city is quite useless, but as you wish ;) --Gerda Arendt (talk) 19:55, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
- 1.2 Time of origin
- Who were Bernhard Friedrich Richter and Friedrich Smend?
- I gave the former an ill-link, and added "church musician in Leipzig" - he was for a year JSB's interim successor - And I added musicologist (with link) to the other. --GA
- The sentence beginning In 1912 feels too long, and could do with being split.
- tried --GA
- Link musicologist.
- done for the other, - for this one, we'd have a sea of blue --GA
- nor even the chorale – why even?
- well, Richter had concluded that the motet (Bach's composition) was performed for that funeral, but not even the chorale by Franck and Crüger was mentioned in the order of the service --GA
- which led Smend to suggest – what did?
- as mentioned: the symmetry in all these three pieces - I linked to the structure articles which are perhaps more useful for the purpose --GA
- Put Cantus firmus in italics and link it.
- link it yes, but it became a word of English --GA
- rather than for a funeral – seems over repetitive.
- can't be repeated enough, because for all these centuries (!) it ("funeral") was believed, and still is believed by many, - perhaps the key fact in this article --GA
- According to Bach scholar... is another rather indigestibly long sentence imo.
- offering another semi-colon --Gerda Arendt (talk) 20:27, 15 May 2021 (UTC)
- 2 Structure and scoring
- Remove duplicated links (bass, soprano, tenor, alto).
- borderline: people might come directly from the TOC, and here is where scoring is discussed --GA
- Is the middle voice in the motet's SSATB setting needed?
- We would have to ask Francis and can't. Is the sentence needed? --GA
- The second paragraph is complex, and I’m not sure the first sentence (The music is arranged…) is needed.
- I believe that sentence is a great summary (again not by me) of the complexity, and a warning that it will be complex. --GA
- The table seems to have some unneeded brackets. I’m not sure it helps explain the text that well, which on its own should be able to explain the symmetrical nature of the work.
- Several layers would be hard to draw from the table alone. --Gerda Arendt (talk) 20:13, 6 June 2021 (UTC)
- 2.1 Movements
- The sentence introducing the table is imo redundant.
- Yes, but it's a way to avoid links from the bolded headers. --GA
- Link incipit.
- that would also be a bolded link - to be avoided. "Incipit" is only used here because it's shorter then "beginning of" in the explanation. Any better idea? --GA
- Are the individual time signatures for each movement noteworthy enough to include here in the article (possibly not imo)?
- Only here can you see at a glance the variety even in the chorale stanza settings. --GA
- The table seems to replicate information in the paragraphs that follow. Because of this, I wouldn’t include it.
- "at a glance" and in easy comparison is a different quality, no? --Gerda Arendt (talk) 20:20, 6 June 2021 (UTC)
- 3 Reception
- has been regarded – by who?
- There are two. I dropped the first, - we can simply say "it is unique ..." in Bach's work, because there's nothing comparable. The second is based on the source saying "Considered by many judges to be one of Bach’s greatest Motets". How could that come out better? - I tried combining the two, please check. --GA
- I would amend It has been regarded as to ‘It is regarded as’.
- fixed by combination --GA
- I’m not sure that ‘Reception’ is the right title for the section. It seems to start of discussing the ways in which the work has been performed, before moving on to a description of more recent published editions.
- Yes, and Francis again. I think publication deserves a separated section, before. --GA
Hope this helps. Regards, Amitchell125 (talk) 19:28, 14 May 2021 (UTC)
- Thank you, Amitchell125, yes, very helpful! --Gerda Arendt (talk) 20:36, 6 June 2021 (UTC)
Aza
[edit]- Lead
- Hmm four paragraph leads seems unwarranted, and both the end of the 1st and most of the second discuss the text anyways, perhaps combine these?
- done --GA
- "which contains key Lutheran teaching"—this makes it sound exclusively Lutheran, but surely this text is used by other denominations
- Not sure if I get what you mean. The Biblical text is used by many, but the Lutherans based their teaching especially on this passage. Which to say would be too much for this lead. --GA
- "1912 dating"—perhaps "traditional dating"? "1912 dating" without context could be a bit confusing to lay readers
- understand, and will need help rephrasing, perhaps after you get to that part in the article and then can help better to say what should be pointed out. I grew up with being sure it was written for a funeral, and doubts came only with researching for this article. Many readers will come with the same premise/bias. --Gerda Arendt (talk) 20:49, 6 June 2021 (UTC)
- Maybe say who made the first recording if you're going to give the year?
- no, too much detail for a part that isn't even in this article but the discography --GA
- more later.. Aza24 (talk) 00:45, 5 June 2021 (UTC)
- Thank you, helpful! --Gerda Arendt (talk) 20:49, 6 June 2021 (UTC)
Hi Gerda Arendt, it's been over a month since the last comment in this PR. Usually PRs that are open for more than a month without additional comments are closed. Are you still interested in receiving comments, or can we close this? Z1720 (talk) 16:49, 7 July 2021 (UTC)
- You can close it, - comments can we informally on the talk. --Gerda Arendt (talk) 19:07, 7 July 2021 (UTC)